1) The roundtable discussion focused on cheating in online and hybrid courses.
2) Participants were asked to share their experiences with student cheating, including any successes or failures in preventing it.
3) The discussion covered different types of assessments that students may cheat on, such as exams, papers, discussions, and assignments, and ways that instructors can address cheating by focusing on mastery of content rather than just performance.
This document provides tips on how to liberate creativity and entrepreneurship. It discusses factors that can hinder creativity like praise for individual work, hierarchies, and competition. It recommends eliminating these restrictions by creating a network structure without hierarchies, rewarding teamwork, and embracing individualism. The document also gives suggestions for how to encourage creativity such as letting others lead, focusing on ideas rather than results, and setting up a creative work environment with colors, images, and doodling areas. Examples of creative companies and concepts like Mercedes' self-driving car and a hover car concept are also provided.
Small businesses can now participate in global markets due to developments in transportation and the internet that have made international trade easier. Specifically, small businesses can get started globally by taking advantage of the internet to research customer needs, starting with a small niche product or service, and working through distributors to reach customers internationally rather than shipping directly themselves.
Canadian conferences is a document discussing two online conferences in Canada:
- mesh is Canada's leading online conference exploring how the internet is changing life. It has four streams and is designed to be interactive. It was founded in 2005 and is known as a world-class conference. Regular admission is $639.
- interlink is an international web design conference that welcomes various online professionals. It allows attendees to meet others in the industry and get inspired through talks and interactive workshops. It takes place at Capilano University in North Vancouver.
Startup festival Zero Barriers to Entry. Learn How To Compete! - Mike MonteroStartupfest
Open source, APIs, cloud computing, real time, outsourcing and Mechanical Turk have commoditized all of the essential barriers that once existed to building a start up and leading. Ideas are a dime a dozen and with entrepreneurship on the rise and methodologies like Agile and Lean, execution is less and less a competitive mechanism for rising above your competition. Learn some of the new rules and trends for building a start up that gets recognized. Understand what potential employees, investors and partners look for to determine if your start up is going to be the winner.
How Technology is Changing the Future of LearningDavid Kelly
These slides were used in support of a keynote I delivered at the 2015 eACH Conference.
If you're interested in bringing this talk/workshop into your event or organization, please contact me at LnDDave@gmail.com.
1) The roundtable discussion focused on cheating in online and hybrid courses.
2) Participants were asked to share their experiences with student cheating, including any successes or failures in preventing it.
3) The discussion covered different types of assessments that students may cheat on, such as exams, papers, discussions, and assignments, and ways that instructors can address cheating by focusing on mastery of content rather than just performance.
This document provides tips on how to liberate creativity and entrepreneurship. It discusses factors that can hinder creativity like praise for individual work, hierarchies, and competition. It recommends eliminating these restrictions by creating a network structure without hierarchies, rewarding teamwork, and embracing individualism. The document also gives suggestions for how to encourage creativity such as letting others lead, focusing on ideas rather than results, and setting up a creative work environment with colors, images, and doodling areas. Examples of creative companies and concepts like Mercedes' self-driving car and a hover car concept are also provided.
Small businesses can now participate in global markets due to developments in transportation and the internet that have made international trade easier. Specifically, small businesses can get started globally by taking advantage of the internet to research customer needs, starting with a small niche product or service, and working through distributors to reach customers internationally rather than shipping directly themselves.
Canadian conferences is a document discussing two online conferences in Canada:
- mesh is Canada's leading online conference exploring how the internet is changing life. It has four streams and is designed to be interactive. It was founded in 2005 and is known as a world-class conference. Regular admission is $639.
- interlink is an international web design conference that welcomes various online professionals. It allows attendees to meet others in the industry and get inspired through talks and interactive workshops. It takes place at Capilano University in North Vancouver.
Startup festival Zero Barriers to Entry. Learn How To Compete! - Mike MonteroStartupfest
Open source, APIs, cloud computing, real time, outsourcing and Mechanical Turk have commoditized all of the essential barriers that once existed to building a start up and leading. Ideas are a dime a dozen and with entrepreneurship on the rise and methodologies like Agile and Lean, execution is less and less a competitive mechanism for rising above your competition. Learn some of the new rules and trends for building a start up that gets recognized. Understand what potential employees, investors and partners look for to determine if your start up is going to be the winner.
How Technology is Changing the Future of LearningDavid Kelly
These slides were used in support of a keynote I delivered at the 2015 eACH Conference.
If you're interested in bringing this talk/workshop into your event or organization, please contact me at LnDDave@gmail.com.
The document discusses the challenges of creating engaging content across different platforms and the need for content strategists to work together to solve these challenges. It notes that while university websites often feel like "brochureware", content strategists can advocate for more meaningful content and a unified content creation process. The document suggests reading material from Richard Prowse, a content strategist who believes in inspiring people to achieve their potential through positive collaboration.
This document discusses the concept of Enterprise 2.0, which refers to the use of social software platforms in businesses and organizations. It outlines how Enterprise 2.0 aims to break down traditional hierarchies and promote more collaboration between customers, employees, and suppliers. Examples of Enterprise 2.0 tools include wikis, blogs, forums, and social networks, which can be used to share knowledge more openly within organizations. The document also notes that Enterprise 2.0 approaches may lead to faster innovation, lower costs, and better responsiveness to customers.
The document discusses how companies can harness the power of word-of-mouth marketing, or "groundswell", to boost their business. It recommends that companies energize their most enthusiastic customers to serve as advocates by enabling user connections and supporting user communities. Executives must embrace user feedback and input to continuously improve products and services. Fostering internal collaboration through tools like wikis and blogs can also create a groundswell within a company by engaging employees. Overall, being responsive to customers and empowering employees transforms a company through a shift in thinking brought on by shared successes.
A presentation I developed for a group of college media editors who wanted to know more about how to use new media technology to run their newsrooms and get better jobs.
Matthew Holder is the communications manager at the British Safety Council who discusses their campaigns to educate young people about occupational safety and health. Their Speak Up, Stay Safe campaign develops resources tailored to young people's interests using bold graphics and mixing serious and humorous content. They worked with youth groups to design the campaign and produced videos, fact sheets, a mobile app game, and social media presence. While the campaign has been popular and successful in reaching thousands, truly changing safety culture in the workplace faces significant challenges.
This document discusses using technology tools to enhance teaching and learning. It lists several online tools for creating animations, audio recordings, presentations, and collaborating online. It warns against using technology just for entertainment and suggests leading students to new perspectives by helping them connect and learn. A quote from Sir Ken Robinson says that the seeds of change are always present if the right conditions allow them to bloom.
This is a presentation developed by Julia Loughran, ThoughtLink, Inc. for the Washington DC Chapter of the Society for Technical Communication (STC). It was presented on Thursday, March 26, 2009 in Silver Spring, MD.
Connected research is a new form of market research that uses interactive online tools to facilitate social interactions between consumers and allow for a more equal relationship between researchers and participants. It goes beyond traditional quantitative and qualitative research methods to also utilize online discussions, bulletin boards, communities, and other techniques to learn from consumers and allow their active participation. Some benefits are a more holistic view of consumers' opinions and the opportunity for ongoing conversations rather than one-time surveys. The document provides several examples of connected research techniques and their potential application to understanding brand perceptions.
Crowdsourcing involves soliciting contributions from a large group of people, especially online, to accomplish tasks traditionally performed by employees or suppliers. It originated from a conversation between Wired magazine journalists in 2006. There are several types of crowdsourcing including crowdcontests, macrotasks, microtasks, and crowdfunding. While it provides benefits like low costs and access to diverse talent, there are also challenges to control and quality. Successful crowdsourcing requires dividing work into clear tasks and choosing the right online platform and crowd for each job.
Class 8: Introduction to web technology entrepreneurshipallanchao
This document provides an agenda and content for a startup consulting session. The agenda includes a quiz, review of prior material, and discussions on marketing, distribution, advertising, promotion, and revenue models. Marketing topics covered are positioning, targeting, differentiation, competitors, and critical mass. The document discusses various online and offline marketing options for web startups including SEO, PPC, social media, and PR. It also covers analytics, virality, revenue models of advertising, subscription, and transactions.
From the adoption of content management systems to the explosion of Web 2.0 features, museum websites have undergone enormous growth and change over the past decade. This session features three speakers who have been working in the museum website space during this critical period of rapid growth and change. Presented at the California Association of Museums Annual Conference in San Jose, CA, March 2010.
Is collaboration the future of business IT? - Patrick Bolger, HornbillSITS - The ITSM Show
To improve IT agility and value, we must change the way we work. Getting closer to customers is hard enough when you’re in the same building, but is tougher still when working across different borders and cultures. Collaboration technologies could provide the answer, but before you consider adoption, this session will help you ask the right questions.
Web Communities With RelationSys And D2CDavid Terrar
D2C and RelationSys at the Internet World 2009 providing some thoughts and suggested reading on enterprise social software, shift happens. permission marketing, and the future (as well as explaining a little of what they do)
This document discusses the use of wikis for collaboration in the workplace. It defines wikis and outlines some of their main concepts. It then discusses why wikis can enable collaboration by pooling talent and building a shared information infrastructure, but also notes potential downsides like a lack of knowledge sharing culture or security concerns. The document provides examples of how wikis can be used for corporate knowledge bases, project management, marketing plans, and more. It concludes with some recommendations for using wikis effectively and lists some popular wiki platforms.
This document discusses focal points for working in the Internet of Things ecosystem. It touches on improving consumer experiences through prototyping, building tools and practices for others, helping users become literate, and streamlining standardization efforts. The IoT ecosystem involves startups, incubators, corporations, governments, standards groups, and non-profits with sometimes competing interests and objectives. The author advocates for prototyping well, building transparent business processes, partnering broadly, helping users become literate, and actively engaging with the community.
The document discusses various topics related to creative industries including collaboration, viral and guerrilla marketing, the long tail effect, and different business models for selling creative works including free, ad-supported, and premium models. It also mentions challenges around intellectual property and the potential for an online resource center to help connect creative industry experts, share resources and opportunities, and facilitate networking and learning.
The document discusses frugal marketing strategies for startups. It recommends defining a narrow target audience and brand positioning to operate without mass media. It also suggests leveraging resources like thought leadership, public relations, awards, executive branding, pricing, country of origin, sustainability, and online media presence to build a brand on a low marketing budget. The document provides tips like creating your own marketing channels, prioritizing insights over information, going online, owning your ecosystem, and narrowly defining your audience.
This document discusses how social media has evolved and how it can be used authentically by organizations. It notes that social media is about people connecting with each other, not technology. It provides examples of how universities are using social media through blogs, social networks, private communities, video, podcasting, and RSS feeds. The document emphasizes that social media efforts should focus on facilitating discussion and participation rather than traditional one-way marketing messages.
The document discusses the challenges of creating engaging content across different platforms and the need for content strategists to work together to solve these challenges. It notes that while university websites often feel like "brochureware", content strategists can advocate for more meaningful content and a unified content creation process. The document suggests reading material from Richard Prowse, a content strategist who believes in inspiring people to achieve their potential through positive collaboration.
This document discusses the concept of Enterprise 2.0, which refers to the use of social software platforms in businesses and organizations. It outlines how Enterprise 2.0 aims to break down traditional hierarchies and promote more collaboration between customers, employees, and suppliers. Examples of Enterprise 2.0 tools include wikis, blogs, forums, and social networks, which can be used to share knowledge more openly within organizations. The document also notes that Enterprise 2.0 approaches may lead to faster innovation, lower costs, and better responsiveness to customers.
The document discusses how companies can harness the power of word-of-mouth marketing, or "groundswell", to boost their business. It recommends that companies energize their most enthusiastic customers to serve as advocates by enabling user connections and supporting user communities. Executives must embrace user feedback and input to continuously improve products and services. Fostering internal collaboration through tools like wikis and blogs can also create a groundswell within a company by engaging employees. Overall, being responsive to customers and empowering employees transforms a company through a shift in thinking brought on by shared successes.
A presentation I developed for a group of college media editors who wanted to know more about how to use new media technology to run their newsrooms and get better jobs.
Matthew Holder is the communications manager at the British Safety Council who discusses their campaigns to educate young people about occupational safety and health. Their Speak Up, Stay Safe campaign develops resources tailored to young people's interests using bold graphics and mixing serious and humorous content. They worked with youth groups to design the campaign and produced videos, fact sheets, a mobile app game, and social media presence. While the campaign has been popular and successful in reaching thousands, truly changing safety culture in the workplace faces significant challenges.
This document discusses using technology tools to enhance teaching and learning. It lists several online tools for creating animations, audio recordings, presentations, and collaborating online. It warns against using technology just for entertainment and suggests leading students to new perspectives by helping them connect and learn. A quote from Sir Ken Robinson says that the seeds of change are always present if the right conditions allow them to bloom.
This is a presentation developed by Julia Loughran, ThoughtLink, Inc. for the Washington DC Chapter of the Society for Technical Communication (STC). It was presented on Thursday, March 26, 2009 in Silver Spring, MD.
Connected research is a new form of market research that uses interactive online tools to facilitate social interactions between consumers and allow for a more equal relationship between researchers and participants. It goes beyond traditional quantitative and qualitative research methods to also utilize online discussions, bulletin boards, communities, and other techniques to learn from consumers and allow their active participation. Some benefits are a more holistic view of consumers' opinions and the opportunity for ongoing conversations rather than one-time surveys. The document provides several examples of connected research techniques and their potential application to understanding brand perceptions.
Crowdsourcing involves soliciting contributions from a large group of people, especially online, to accomplish tasks traditionally performed by employees or suppliers. It originated from a conversation between Wired magazine journalists in 2006. There are several types of crowdsourcing including crowdcontests, macrotasks, microtasks, and crowdfunding. While it provides benefits like low costs and access to diverse talent, there are also challenges to control and quality. Successful crowdsourcing requires dividing work into clear tasks and choosing the right online platform and crowd for each job.
Class 8: Introduction to web technology entrepreneurshipallanchao
This document provides an agenda and content for a startup consulting session. The agenda includes a quiz, review of prior material, and discussions on marketing, distribution, advertising, promotion, and revenue models. Marketing topics covered are positioning, targeting, differentiation, competitors, and critical mass. The document discusses various online and offline marketing options for web startups including SEO, PPC, social media, and PR. It also covers analytics, virality, revenue models of advertising, subscription, and transactions.
From the adoption of content management systems to the explosion of Web 2.0 features, museum websites have undergone enormous growth and change over the past decade. This session features three speakers who have been working in the museum website space during this critical period of rapid growth and change. Presented at the California Association of Museums Annual Conference in San Jose, CA, March 2010.
Is collaboration the future of business IT? - Patrick Bolger, HornbillSITS - The ITSM Show
To improve IT agility and value, we must change the way we work. Getting closer to customers is hard enough when you’re in the same building, but is tougher still when working across different borders and cultures. Collaboration technologies could provide the answer, but before you consider adoption, this session will help you ask the right questions.
Web Communities With RelationSys And D2CDavid Terrar
D2C and RelationSys at the Internet World 2009 providing some thoughts and suggested reading on enterprise social software, shift happens. permission marketing, and the future (as well as explaining a little of what they do)
This document discusses the use of wikis for collaboration in the workplace. It defines wikis and outlines some of their main concepts. It then discusses why wikis can enable collaboration by pooling talent and building a shared information infrastructure, but also notes potential downsides like a lack of knowledge sharing culture or security concerns. The document provides examples of how wikis can be used for corporate knowledge bases, project management, marketing plans, and more. It concludes with some recommendations for using wikis effectively and lists some popular wiki platforms.
This document discusses focal points for working in the Internet of Things ecosystem. It touches on improving consumer experiences through prototyping, building tools and practices for others, helping users become literate, and streamlining standardization efforts. The IoT ecosystem involves startups, incubators, corporations, governments, standards groups, and non-profits with sometimes competing interests and objectives. The author advocates for prototyping well, building transparent business processes, partnering broadly, helping users become literate, and actively engaging with the community.
The document discusses various topics related to creative industries including collaboration, viral and guerrilla marketing, the long tail effect, and different business models for selling creative works including free, ad-supported, and premium models. It also mentions challenges around intellectual property and the potential for an online resource center to help connect creative industry experts, share resources and opportunities, and facilitate networking and learning.
The document discusses frugal marketing strategies for startups. It recommends defining a narrow target audience and brand positioning to operate without mass media. It also suggests leveraging resources like thought leadership, public relations, awards, executive branding, pricing, country of origin, sustainability, and online media presence to build a brand on a low marketing budget. The document provides tips like creating your own marketing channels, prioritizing insights over information, going online, owning your ecosystem, and narrowly defining your audience.
This document discusses how social media has evolved and how it can be used authentically by organizations. It notes that social media is about people connecting with each other, not technology. It provides examples of how universities are using social media through blogs, social networks, private communities, video, podcasting, and RSS feeds. The document emphasizes that social media efforts should focus on facilitating discussion and participation rather than traditional one-way marketing messages.
A presentation delivered in Sydney Australia on existing web technology and some of the newer emerging web technologies and how to use them in your business
The document discusses emerging technologies and how businesses can leverage them. It provides examples of technologies like web 2.0, cloud computing, mashups and how companies have used them. Case studies are presented on using tools like Google Apps, Skype, Central Desktop and data from websites to improve business processes and deliver better services. The presentation encourages attendees to develop a one page plan to apply emerging technologies to address three business issues.
Crowdsourcing In Der Konsumgüterbranche - Entwicklung Und ÜbersichtYannig Roth
This presentation was given at ISPO's "Open Innovation Wiesn" event in Munich, on September 22nd 2014. The presentation is in English, the talk was given in Englissh too but the title was in German, in front of German innovation and marketing managers. The title means "Crowdsourcing In The FMCG Sector - Development And Overview," elmphasizing that the presentation was not only about the sports sector, but about fast-moving consumer goods to inspire ISPO's attendees.
Thought Leadership in the Construction IndustryImagine
Thought leadership (sometimes called "content marketing" or "idea marketing") can one of the most powerful but challenging tools in your marketing toolbox. Sadly, many builders and A/E/C firms have given up trying to develop valuable content, and started dressing up their brochures as thought leadership. While an impressive brochure has its place, it’s not exactly what we’re going for here. With the right approach, B2B companies large and small can leverage their Subject Matter Expertise (SME) and create valuable content that will connect with their customers and drive business results.
Maitland Waters Social Media @ SOHO house_london_june_6_2011Symbio Agency Ltd
The document provides an overview of a presentation on digital strategy and social media. It discusses relationship networks and how social media can benefit businesses. It emphasizes the importance of an omnichannel digital strategy and highlights examples of how to measure return on investment from social media initiatives.
Challenges and Opportunities for Mainstream Enterprise Social Computing Lee Bryant
The document discusses opportunities for mainstream adoption of enterprise social computing. It outlines benefits like improved collaboration, productivity, learning and innovation through lightweight social tools. Challenges include changing IT strategies and policies to support more decentralized sharing. A layered "social stack" is introduced including feeds, bookmarks, blogs, wikis and networks. Case studies and real-world use cases are suggested to demonstrate value to organizations.
Leveraging Networks Teigland Aug 2011 GEM64Robin Teigland
The document discusses how organizations must change their approach to keep up with rapid external changes by becoming more open and leveraging networks. It highlights how an open, co-created business model that encourages knowledge sharing internally and externally can help organizations adapt and thrive in a shifting environment defined by increased connectivity and collaboration.
Thanks so much for the opportunity to speak with you today. It’s good to get form behind my computer every once and a while and get out to meet real people face to face. As a professional business coach, most of my time is spent in front of my computer and on the phone talking to my clients all over the world. Today’s topic is very dear to my heart because I believe it’s one of the most essential tool that small organizations especially need to begin to really wrap their minds around and use. If only for the benefit of time and money saved, tons of leaders can drive real relevance and streamline productivity using the ideas that we will speak about today. Before we begin let’s do a little homework: Please put your cell phones on stun Follow along with the worksheet in front of you Stop me at anytime with questions Exercise, what’s the one thing that if you could do more effectively would make the difference for your organization